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Official Q & A with Everyday Edisons Engineering Team
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Ian Kovacevich
kovac
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Have any questions for the Everyday Edisons Engineering Team? Well now is your chance and here is your place.

Ask questions and find out more from the team who is behind all of the engineering and prototyping at Everyday Edisons.

posted October 09, 2008 13:24 (
)


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Tom Bobo
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Hi Jan,

Do you every use lost wax casting to make prototype metal parts? Do you use A CNC mill for prototype parts and if so is it hard to program?

posted October 09, 2008 13:30 (
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Ian Kovacevich
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Tom, we have used lost wax before for some Tom,
We have used lost wax before for some of our prototypes. For our patterns we actually used RP parts from a 3dSystems machine that uses wax as the build material. It took some trials, but with some perseverance we got usable parts in aluminum.
We have several CNC machines here that are used regularly; a large 4 foot by 8 foot gantry router from ShopBot ® that is great for large parts in foam, plastics and MDF. We have a small detail machine from Roland® with a forth axis used on projects like the grading pen. When then have a full function 3 axis CNC from Tormach® that can cut anything which we use for the bulk of our machining. Difficulty of programming depends on what you are looking to create. 2D parts cut from dxf files are very easy when compared to surface machining a complex 3d shape. There are many software solutions available at all price ranges depending on what you are trying to achieve and what type of machine you are working with. Good luck
Ian

posted October 09, 2008 14:05 (
)
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Tom Bobo
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Jan I’m starting to salivate you have access to some great toys.

Fifteen years ago I designed a casting machine to compete very economically with the high priced German and Italian casting machines for the jewelry industry. I started to build it but never finished. I thought at the time it would be great for prototyping as well as jewelry manufacturing. The machine would have taken a lot of the guess work out of the temperamental casting process. But I guess a lot of that type of metal work can be done on small CNC mills.

posted October 09, 2008 14:59 (
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Devin White
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Where do you guys go as far as resources, who do you contact when your put up to the challenge?

posted October 09, 2008 17:38 (
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Devin White
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If anyone at all? I mean you are professionals its kinda like calling yourselves lol.

posted October 09, 2008 17:38 (
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Ian Kovacevich
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t depends on the situation. A good example is rapid prototyping. While we do have a Dimension 3d printer in house that runs nearly 100 hours a week, we do not have an any other machines such as SLA, SLS, polyjet, DLS…these machines often need more space, some need ventilation and can use many different types of materials for different purposes. We have found that this is such a competitive market that we are able to get reasonable pricing and turn around without the need to maintain and house such equipment.

posted October 10, 2008 06:18 (
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sam ausasala shafer jr(sam)
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Hi there engineering team can you tell me what kinds of products or items in general you are capable of making? kind of curious as far as what measure it will take to decide on a particular product to be determined as far as making it a go or not. Thanks for all the hard work you guys are doing keep up the good work.

posted March 16, 2009 18:32 (
)



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